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Excerpts from Ray Carney's
Speaking the Language of Desire
"A Parable for Critics"
a discussion of Day of Wrath
(Vredens Dag)

In the emphasis on the so-called
spirituality of Dreyer's work, it is sometimes forgotten that our physical selves
and sexual energies are as important within his films as our hearts and souls
and minds. It is not surprising that Dreyer should be interested in both aspects
of his characters. His films take as their subject practical acts of expression.
Our bodies are the way we express our spirits for Dreyer. That is why, despite
the fact that he is often thought to be the most chaste of filmmakers, there
are scenes of sexual encounters, or references to sexual encounters, in each
of Dreyer's films from Vampyr to Gertrud. Our practical sexuality
is one of the principal ways we express our emotions in the world, as not only
this film, but Dreyer's next important film, Ordet, emphasizes.

Furthermore, sexual and physical
expressions have a very special and diacritical relationship to social forms
of discourse in Dreyer's work. If Dreyer is the supreme poet of all of the ways
we attempt to rise above or go beyond the limitations of social categories of
understanding in our "higher" selves (in our dreams, visions, and
emotions), he is also the poet of all the ways our "lower" selves
equally escape from social structures and repressive understandings. Our sexual
and physical selves are as much at war with the repressions of society as our
spirits are, and it is not accidental that Dreyer would be interested in those
aspects of our being which extend below man-made rules and ideologies. To understand
"transcendence" in this way–not as as a state of pure spirituality,
but simply as meaning any escape from systems of normalization and control–is
to realize that our bodies and senses potentially "transcend" limiting
representations as much as our souls and ideals do.

One of the ways in which Dreyer asserts
an alternative to the semiotic depersonalizations and neutralizations represented
by Absalon and the churchmen is through a reinstallation of the actual physical
body into a depersonalized expressive system like that of the church's rituals
of interrogation and torture. Herlofs Marte's body in particular represents
a realm of the senses that is pointedly not accounted for by the theological
abstractions involving sin and transgression in the books of the church elders
and the confession she is tortured into giving.

The actress who plays Marte, Anna
Svierkier, has an extraordinarily interesting body and face, of which Dreyer
and his director of photography, Karl Andersson, heighten a viewer's awareness
in a variety of ways. The key-lighting and choice of lenses encourage an almost
painfully over-intimate awareness of her wrinkled skin, her sagging breasts,
her disheveled hair, the lines on her face, and the moistness of her eyes. The
point is to reinstate a particular, physical body at the center of an otherwise
impersonal ceremony of confession. Herlofs Marte will not be made into a disembodied
functionary in an impersonal system. While the churchmen and their ceremony
attempt to neutralize or deny the body, for the sake of saving the spirit separate
from it, Dreyer and Andersson affirm the reality of the realm of the senses.

Reinstalling the human body and senses,
in all of their ungeneralizable particularity, at their place at the center
of life, and as the fundamental source of all expression, is only one step in
a larger expressive project in which Dreyer is engaged in Day of Wrath.
The larger project is a demonstration that Marte (and later Anne) will not be
reduced to being impersonal functions in any system of generalized, formal relationships.
As Dreyer realizes, if capitalism depends on the denaturing of commodities to
make productive standardization possible, it depends equally on the denaturing
of the producers, the abstraction of their identities. Just as Protestantism
defines the body as something that must be subjugated or ignored for the sake
of the soul, so capitalism reduces the individual to an abstracted functionary
in an impersonal system.

The passionate expressiveness of
Marte's face and frightened eyes, her unpredictably shifting vocal tones, her
whimpers, screams, pleas, and sobs, her agitated, impulsive gestures, and her
tears represent manifestations of eccentric, fluxional imaginative energies
that will never be abstractly summarized by or "spoken within" an
abstract system of understanding. They are her reply to the normalizing, standardizing
understandings that the church would apply to her. As the churchmen try to categorize
her, to repressively understand her as a witch, to subject her to a series of
impersonal ceremonies of interrogation and confession, her expressive mobility,
eccentricity, and wildness tell us what their systems can never understand or
eliminate.

Contrast the ways in which the churchmen
who conduct the interrogation are represented. Not only are their vocal tones
normalized but the very questions they ask and the answers they record during
the interrogation are abstract, depersonalized, dispassionate formulas. In contrast
with Marte, who is wearing a rough, ragged, torn dress that reveals as much
flesh as it conceals, their bodies are buttoned up from foot to throat and are
hidden. They have sacrificed their distinctive expressive identities to institutional
systems, while Marte is emphatically what will be "spoken" neither
by an abstract system of clothing nor within a formal ceremony of theological
interrogation....

This
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